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In Search of Rice to Reduce Methane Emissions

In Search of Rice to Reduce Methane Emissions

Livestock, the petroleum industry and landfills are all leading producers of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. But another significant but less well known contributor is one of the world's most popular crops: rice. Rice plants transport methane from the flooded rice field into the atmosphere. A new paper from researchers at the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT has found that it is possible to lower emissions by developing new varieties of rice.

According to the World Bank is responsible for 10% of global  and is also a contributor to nitrous oxide and . Despite this, greenhouse gas emissions from rice systems, particularly in the Latin America and the Caribbean region, has been a largely untapped research area for the reduction of global emissions.

In a new paper published in the journal All Earth, researchers from the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT found that the transition to low-emission rice production systems can be accelerated by using differences in productivity and root qualities to breed a variety of rice that can maintain current yields but lower overall .

The team explored the genetic influences on methane emissions and highlighted the need to exploit and further develop hybrids that take advantage of differences in roots and other above-ground plant anatomy on methane emissions.

María Fernanda Álvarez, rice program leader at the Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT and one of the authors of the paper, explained that although the higher yielding hybrids they studied have a higher absolute methane emissions than current varieties, they produce similar methane per grain of rice. This implies that by adopting rice hybrids, farmers can achieve food security goals without significantly increasing the methane emission per grain of rice compared to lower yielding varieties.

"We must acknowledge that it's not easy to reduce methane emissions and maintain productive rice systems, but our results suggest that there is hope," Álvarez said.

Reducing rice emissions

When soil is flooded, as in rice production, this produces low-oxygen (anaerobic) conditions in which methane-producing bacteria thrive.

The rice plant uses aerenchyma, a spongy chimney-like plant tissue, to allow oxygen to move down into the roots and the methane-producing bacteria in the soil are using the same tube to send methane up into the atmosphere.

Paul Abayomi S. Soremi, the paper's first author and currently a lecturer at the Federal University of Agriculture in Abeokuta, Nigeria, explained that under submerged conditions, the roots of plants in general and rice in particular are responsible for taking up and expelling gases, including methane.

"The challenges to decrease methane emission through the expression of aerenchyma include the non-availability of adequate and up-to-date equipment to characterize aerenchyma, huge consumables requirement and inadequate human capacity," he said, "This requires huge financial investment."

Soremi explained that this aspect of methane transfer has not been fully investigated.

"There is a dearth of appropriate information on the optimization of aerenchyma to decrease methane emission under submerged conditions," he said.

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